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As I’ve done a few times on our trip, I’d like to get a little geeky and provide our experiences with mobile networks, Internet access and mobile blogging across regions of the world.We try to buy a local SIM card and experiment with the local networks via prepaid mobile phone plans, when reasonable. I cannot vouch for the completeness or accuracy of this information – it changes quickly and my perspective is one of a traveler.

Mobile: The problem we experienced with the mobile networks in Russia was that we could never find a pre-paid SIM card plan that would work across the whole country – they may exist, but we couldn’t find one. Megafon may be a good bet. Also, see this list of Russian providers.

We moved quickly on the Trans-Siberian Railway, so it didn’t make sense for us to get a SIM card that may only works for a few days.

Russia cities generally have both GSM and CDMA.Our friends from the UK were able to use their phone from home to SMS family in the UK through many parts of the Trans-Siberian trip.GPRS is also available in Russia depending on the service.

Internet:Wifi access is growing quickly in the major cities we visited, with access being very common St. Petersburg, where our guesthouse (and many others) provided it for free. While our hotel in Moscow didn’t have wifi, there were many cafes and bars that had great free wifi access. Irkutsk and Yekaterinburg both had cafes that advertised free wifi access, but we rarely found anything that worked for us.Internet cafes were quite common and sporting strong connections.However, unlike Asia, I was not able to plug my own laptop into their network.This trend lasted through all of Europe.

Scandinavia(Finland, Sweden, Norway and Denmark)

Mobile:If there is anywhere a mobile device should work, it is Scandinavia, home of Nokia and some of the highest rates of mobile phone adoption in the world.It’s true, it is easy to get a SIM card and the network is 3G, fast and consistent. However, the problem in traveling across Scandinavia is that the PrePaid plans do not work across countries without burning up minutes with expensive roaming.Plus, if you get a plan in Finland and run out of minutes in Norway, it is impossible to top-up your plan.The pre-paid plans don’t travel well.I was hoping to find an all-Scandinavia plan but came up empty.

Internet Access:We found free wi-fi to be quite easy to find in cities like Helsinki, Oslo and Copenhangen.Many hotels offer wifi as an included part of the room – though you may have to ask for the password.While wifi is easy, Internet cafes are not as easy.We’ve found that, in general, Internet cafes are easiest to find in a) places where people cannot afford personal computers, like in SE Asia b) places on the backpacker trail, like Florence, Italy.With Scandinavia being neither, internet cafes are harder to find – but still available.

Europe:

Mobile: We entered Europe from Amsterdam, Holland and it was from here that we started our Vodafone adventure.Vodafone is one of the major European providers that is close to providing near-seamless access across the continent.The key point with a service like Vodafone is that you can travel across countries and still be able to top-up your prepaid account.Vodafone stores are everywhere.However, if you have a Vodafone card from one country and travel to another *be sure* to explain to the Vodafone rep that you need a refill voucher card for foreign cards – they are different from domestic cards.Also, when topping-up your account from abroad, note that you must use a different menu item on the voice menu – wait for the menu to ask about a *foreign* voucher number.

We bought a Vodafone prepaid SIM card in Amsterdam and immediately connected to the voice network.However, the phone (Palm Treo 650) would not connect to GPRS with the built-in settings.When I would try to edit the GPRS Network settings provided by Vodafone, the phone would tell me they are locked.After talking to the Vodafone helpline a couple of times, I learned that I had to add a new network connection with a different APN.I’m sorry that I don’t have the info on the APN right now, but the Vodafone help line can help.

Within a couple of days, we had both GSM and GPRS working on the phone.Then, we left Holland and quickly discovered that the coverage may be near-ubiquitous, but there are penalties for roaming.After leaving Holland, we burned through prepaid minutes like wildfire.I was amazed at how quickly GPRS access would burn up minutes. Usually, international voice costs about 1 Euro for the connection and then something like .75 Euros per minute after than. The EU is about to regulate the industry in Europe by forcing them to cut roaming charges by 40-60%. I am a fan – the charges are ridiculous.

Then lesson here is to watch out for roaming charges within Europe on Vodafone.You cannot travel across countries without roaming charges.

Internet: In most of Europe there is no shortage of Internet cafes, particularly if backpackers are frequent.Most cafes charge 3-5 Euros per hour of access.No Internet cafes would allow me to plug my laptop into their network.However, many Internet cafes have wifi that you can use for the same rate as a terminal.We found that outside the major cities in southern Europe, wifi is less available.

A final note:A gadget that would be amazing to have while traveling is a wifi detector so that you could be walking through a new city and find a wifi signal with ease. People sniffed out a wifi signal on a random section of street in SienaItaly.

Conclusion

In general, across all 29 countries we visited (except Japan), an unlocked GSM phone will work for voice calling.What is much harder, but still possible nearly everywhere is connecting to GPRS (Internet, email, data).If you absolutely need to connect to GPRS, take a very mainstream and popular phone, such as a Nokia, because the phone store people will have instructions for the connection.I had problems using a Palm Treo 650 because many foreign data plans did not support it for GPRS.

Put simply, Norway's Lofoten Islands are surely the most stunning mountain scenery we've ever experienced. I'll let the pictures and a few anecdotes tell the story...

We stayed in a tiny fishing village called Henningsvaer,or Henningsvær, if you want to be accurate. Our lodging for three nights was a "rorbu", which is a fisherman's cabin redone for visitors. It was low season, so we got it for half price for three nights (USD$80 per night). It had a kitchen, a view over the water, four beds and low doorways - as my head would tell you. Our expectations were exceeded from the start.

Having a kitchen was nice because Norway is obscenely expensive: $8 dollars to rent a DVD, $10 for a pint of beer at a restaurant. We ate meatballs and noodles at "home". Speaking of home, this was the view out of the back.

and from the side...

The little town of Henningsvær, is called "the Venice of the Lofotens". I think every country has a "Venice of" and "Paris of". It is an incredibly charming place.

Here's a closer look at the mountains in the back...

However, the real sights, the real drama and the reason we took two days to arrive were the mountains that seemed to go on and on and provide a perfect backdrop for quaint arctic dioramas.

The Lofotens only get about 280,000 tourists a year, likey thanks to being so far out of the way. When we were there, it was low season and the place was empty - closed for the season and preparing for weeks of darkness. We would both like to experience an arctic winter some day. We've done an Asian summer - why not an arctic winter?

Did you know? Fjords are fjords because they are by the sea and are formed by glaciers. That is why you find them in places like Norway and New Zealand - places where giant glaciers existed.

Despite all the focus on sealife and catching cod - we saw little wildlife, but I made friends with a jellyfish that liked to pose for the camera in the unbelievably crystal clear water...

In the end though, it was the glaciar-carved mountains in the rural artic settings that really peeled our scalp back, as our friend Tom would say.

It's funny how things tend to work out. Sometimes a tiny bit of information can turn into something wonderful. Without this helpful post, it's likely that we would have made other plans and not gone north at all. As it turned out, our decision to keep moving northward turned into a highlight of the whole trip. Thank you Internet!

Our overland trip across Scandinavia...

This video is from two days of exploring the Lofoten Islands via car. Despite being a couple of hundred miles into the Arctic Circle, it is quite mild thanks to the gulf stream current. A stunningly beautiful place our jaws are still on the floor. Pictures and more info coming soon...